Looking for best 7FT Leather Police Style Dog Training Lead 3/4inch for dog training, working dog?
please consider our stiched Classic Double Training Leather Dog Leash 3/4''
- 7 foot Long (210cm)
- 3/4 inch wide (20mm )
- Made of durable and selected leather
- 2 Brass Snap Hook
- Perfect for training you Pitbull
- 3 Brass Rings
- stitched on the end
- Available in Black or Brown
7FT Leather Police Style Dog Training Lead 3/4 Pitbull
How to Use This Dog lead :
- Over the shoulder Leash:
Bring handle end over your shoulder opposite to the side you wish to walk your Pitbull, across your back and up under your armpit.
Attach that leash clip to the floating "o" ring to make a loop across your upper body.
Attach your Pitbull to other end and go!
- Waist Leash: Wrap leash around your waist and clip the snap hook to the floating ring.
Clipping the snap directly to the floating ring will help it stay put instead of falling down like a loose pair of pants.
Attach your dog and go!
- Walk 2 dogs: Simply attach one dog to each leash snap and hold the leash in the middle.
General "Woof" leash Tip: If you feel that after reading this info you still have questions about ordering correct type leash please call, email or fax us and we will answer your additional questions and will help with selecting right leash for your dog and taskLooking for training dog leash 5 foot CLICK LINK BELOW
5FT Classic Double Training Leather Dog Leash 3/4 Pitbull ..to start reading this article from the beginning please click on here....Although her mother didn't claim that pit bulls are vicious or bad, her question turned on the assumption that they serve a particular purpose: to protect their owners. In the experience of some respondents, negative assumptions about their dogs were unspecified, but the tone of people's remarks left no doubt as to their opinion of the breed. When a respondent who teaches at a local college told his colleagues that his family had adopted a pit bull, one of them exclaimed, "Oh my God, you didn't!" Stigma was also indirectly expressed in terms of the suggestion of more appropriate breeds. Another colleague chided him, saying, "Couldn't you have been a little smarter and gotten a Cocker spaniel or a Labrador retriever?" There was a sense among some of these owners of an unofficial canon of appropriate family dogs, such as spaniels or retrievers, among others. In adopting a pit bull, they were stepping outside this tradition and confounding other people's expectations. Law enforcement regulations and practices also appeared to stigmatize pit bulls, according to respondents. Many were troubled by the implications of animal control laws and ordinances that singled out pit bulls. Massachusetts cities such as Haverhill and Salem have muzzle laws that apply to pit bulls and other "dangerous breeds." Springfield has outlawed pit bulls altogether. Lynn passed a similar ban in the late 1980s, but later it was challenged and overturned. Some respondents, especially those who live in areas with a high concentration of pit bulls, were sensitive to prejudicial treatment this breed seems to receive from police and animal control officers. One owner who currently lives in Lynn was told by a friend, "...pit bulls in Lynn have a wicked reputation and whenever there's a problem with a pit bull, the cops will shoot them right on the spot." The implication of this comment was that police officers in this city consider pit bulls too dangerous to be evaluated on a case by case basis. The small group of owners whose dogs had been reprimanded by a police officer or animal control official often attributed the response to bias or discrimination. One man had been told that he could not walk his mother's pit bull in public while the dog was in heat. According to this respondent, "I was like, 'What kind of law is that? I've never heard of it.' I think the dog officer was just having a problem because my mother's dog was a pit bull." In sum, breed stigma was manifested in a variety of ways both subtle and direct. Many respondents found that people simply avoided their pit bulls, but a large number of owners also described more pronounced reactions, especially when children were present. According to respondents' experience, the pit bull stereotype had several components to it; pit bulls were expected to be vicious and untrustworthy, unpredictable, and particularly dangerous around children. Although most references to breed stigma revolved around informal interactions with other people, some respondents described this stigma in terms of larger social institutions such as animal control and law enforcement departments.
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